+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs....

Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs....

Date post: 15-Dec-2015
Category:
Upload: adeline-lofty
View: 213 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
33
Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version
Transcript
Page 1: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Mitigating Cheating

A Cliff’s Notes version

Page 2: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

What is cheating?

• The expectations change• Faculty vs. Students vs. administration

Page 3: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.
Page 4: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

• “Stealing a glance at a test, a little bit of plagiarism – it’s just not on people’s radar screens anymore.”

- Donald L. McCabeDuke UniversityCenter of Academic Integrity

Page 5: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Conventional vs. DigitalType Conventional Digital

Copied homework 84.5% 40.2%

Unpermitted collaboration 81.4% 49.5%

Plagiarized a few sentences 46.6% 60.4%

Plagiarized a complete paper 20.2% 13.6%

Used unpermitted notes during an exam

44.5% 27.2%

Coped from someone else during an exam

60.5% 23.5%

Page 6: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.
Page 7: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

UVU TurnItIn statistics

• 2011-2012– 8% of submission scored above 50%– 16% scored above 25%

• 2010-2011– 10% scored above 50%– 23% scored above 25%

• 2009-2010– 7% scored above 50%– 21% scored above 25%

Page 8: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Why cheating?

• A number of reasons

Page 9: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Performance

Page 10: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Napster effect

Page 11: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Class a hoop

Page 12: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Get away with it

Page 13: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Culture

Page 14: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Who is to blame?

Page 15: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Students

Page 16: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Teachers

Page 17: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

• “ – unreasonable assignments, the poor quality of teaching, and unclear instructions on major assignments were mentioned frequently by students.”

Page 18: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

• “I have witnessed cheating on several occasions and even reported it to the professors. On one occasion I was told no action was going to be taken against them since they were doing a poor job of cheating”

Page 19: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

• “Faculty need to be more active in monitoring academic dishonesty as well as punishing those students that participate in it. Facutly often turn their heads or “Punish” on their own terms rather than follow university policy.”

Page 20: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

The institution

Page 21: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.
Page 22: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.
Page 23: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Course design strategies

Page 24: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Avoid war on cheating

Page 25: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

• “…students at schools with high levels of self-reported cheating often discuss the issue of academic dishonesty in terms of a ‘we’ versus ‘they’ mentality. Cheat by us (students) is acceptable because they (faculty and/or administrators) ‘deserve’ it for any number of reasons” (McCabe and Trevino, 1993)

Page 26: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Process documents

• Reflections• Drafts (Annotated bibliography, thesis

statement, etc.)• Multiple assessments• Oral reports (process questions)

Courtesy of TurnItIn.com

Page 27: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

High-Stakes Assessments

Page 28: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Make connections

• Why are students doing this assessment?

Page 29: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

• “Students are also taught that collaboration is a critical business skill that is valued in corporations. Yet, students are often required to complete assignments by themselves with no outside assistance.” (McCabe, Butterfield, and Trevino, 2006)

Page 30: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Statement

• Usually placed in syllabus. Good idea to have it in Canvas if you are using it.

• Consult with department if unsure about language.

• Custom TurnItIn statement

Page 31: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

F2F Strategies

• Proper seat spacing. Seat randomization.• A/B quizzes• Cell phone policy• Random walkthroughs

Page 32: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Other ideas?

Page 33: Mitigating Cheating A Cliff’s Notes version. What is cheating? The expectations change Faculty vs. Students vs. administration.

Strategies for Canvas

• Files• Quizzes


Recommended